Social Sciences, asked by jahanq619, 3 months ago

how does the rotation of the earth cause day and night​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
11

Answer:

We get day and night because the Earth spins (or rotates) on an imaginary line called its axis and different parts of the planet are facing towards the Sun or away from it. It takes 24 hours for the world to turn all the way around, and we call this a day.

Answered by nithinsrisaiachieve
0

Answer:

Daytime is when you can see the sun from where you are, and its light and heat can reach you. Nighttime is when the sun is on the other side of the Earth from you, and its light and heat don’t get to you.

We get day and night because the Earth spins (or rotates) on an imaginary line called its axis and different parts of the planet are facing towards the Sun or away from it.

It takes 24 hours for the world to turn all the way around, and we call this a day. Over a year, the length of the daytime in the part of the Earth where you live changes. Days are longer in the summer and shorter in the winter.

Top 10 facts

It takes 24 hours for the Earth to turn all the way around (rotation). That makes one day and one night.

At any moment, half of the world is in daytime and half is in nighttime.

The world is like a ball. We call the top half the Northern hemisphere and the bottom half the Southern hemisphere. The (imaginary) line between them is called the equator.

In the Northern hemisphere, we have summer in June, July and August and winter is in December, January and February.

In summer the days are longer than they are in winter. In London, the longest day is about 16 hours and 39 minutes and the shortest is 7 hours and 45 minutes.

In the Southern hemisphere the seasons are the other way around. When it is summer in Europe, it is winter in Australia. Imagine celebrating Christmas on a long, hot summer day!

To help us understand where we are in the world, we also split the world into right and left halves called the Eastern hemisphere and the Western hemisphere.

The (imaginary) line between the Eastern and Western hemispheres is called the ‘Prime Meridian’ and it goes through Greenwich Royal Observatory in London.

The world is split into time zones. Continental Europe is in the time zone to the east of Britain, so time is one hour ahead there; when it is 1pm in Britain it is 2pm in France.

On the opposite side of the world from London is the International Date Line. On one side of the line time is 12 hours behind Britain, and on the other side time is 12 hours ahead of Britain. That means that it is a different day on each side of the line

Explanation:

The Earth is always spinning around – sometimes from where you stand on the Earth you can see the Sun (this is the daytime) and sometimes the part of the Earth where you are is facing away from the Sun so it is dark (this is the nighttime). It takes 24 hours for the Earth to spin all the way around, and we call this a day. Find out more about the sun and the Earth.

The sun rises from behind the Earth in the East and sinks below the Earth in the West. The time when it appears is called sunrise, and the time when it disappears is called sunset. The length of time between sunrise and sunset is called daytime.

The Earth spins around an imaginary line that runs between the South Pole and the North Pole. This line isn’t completely straight – so, sometimes the North Pole is pointing away from the sun for long periods of time and it is always dark there, and sometimes the North Pole points towards the sun for long periods of time and it is always light there.

The Earth is also split into Northern and Southern hemispheres, which are divided by an imaginary line called the equator. The North and South poles are as far from the equator as you can get. Britain is in the Northern hemisphere and is slightly closer to the North Pole than it is to the equator.

In Britain we don’t have any days when it is always light or always dark, but the days are longer during the times of the year when the North Pole is pointing towards the sun and shorter when it is pointing away from the sun.

When the days are shorter, there is less time for us to get heat from the sun, so the weather is colder. This is why we get winter. When the days are long, there is more time for us to get heat from the sun so we get hot summer days.

Because the equator is halfway between the North and South poles, the days there are always 12 hours of daytime and 12 hours of nighttime. There is very little difference between the seasons.

In the Southern hemisphere the seasons are at opposite times to the Northern hemisphere. When it is summer here it is winter there, and when it is winter here it is summer there.

The shortest day of the year is called the winter solstice and the longest day of the year is called the summer solstice.

There are two days each year where every place on Earth has 12 hours of daytime and 12 hours of nighttime. These are called the spring and autumn equinoxes.

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